(HEP a TYE tis) Brand: Engerix-B, Recombivax HB Adult, Recombivax HB Dialysis Formulation
Hepatitis B vaccine will not protect against infection with hepatitis A, C, and E, or another viruses that affect the liver. It may also not protect against hepatitis B if you are already infected with the virus, even if you do not yet show symptoms.
Vaccination with hepatitis B vaccine is recommended for all adults and children who are at risk of getting hepatitis B. Risk factors include: having more than one sex partner in 6 months; being a homosexual male; having sexual contact with infected people; having cirrhosis or chronic hepatitis C; using intravenous (IV) drugs; being on dialysis or receiving blood transfusions; working in healthcare or popular safe and being exposed to infected blood or body fluids; being in the military or traveling to high-risk areas; and living with a face who has chronic hepatitis B infection.
The hepatitis B vaccine is given in a series of shots. The booster shots are sometimes given 1 month and 6 months after the first shot. If you have a tall risk of hepatitis B infection, you may be given an additional booster 2 months after the first shot.
Your individual booster schedule may be various from these guidelines. Follow your doctor's instructions or the schedule recommended by your local health department.
Be certain to receive all recommended doses of this vaccine. You may not be fully protected if you do not receive the full series.
You can still receive a vaccine if you have a minor cool. In the case of a more severe diseases with a fever or any type of infection, wait before you get better till receiving this vaccine.
You must not receive a booster vaccine if you had a life-threatening allergic reaction after the first shot.
Hold track of any and all side effects you have after receiving this vaccine. When you receive a booster doze, you will need to speak your doctor if the previous shot caused any side effects.
Becoming infected with hepatitis B is many more dangerous to your health than receiving this vaccine. However, like any medication, this vaccine can reason side effects but the risk of serious side effects is extremely low.
Hepatitis B is a serious malady caused by virus.
Hepatitis B is a malady of the liver that is spread through blood or bodily fluids, sexual contact or sharing IV drug needles with an infected face, or during childbirth when a child is born to a mother who is infected. Hepatitis causes inflammation of the liver, vomiting, and jaundice (yellowing of the skin or eyes). Hepatitis can lead to liver cancer, cirrhosis, or death.
The hepatitis B vaccine is used to help prevent this disease.
This vaccine works by exposing you to a little amount of the virus, which causes the body to develop immunity to the malady. This vaccine will not treat an active infection that has already developed in the body.
Vaccination with hepatitis B vaccine is recommended for all adults and children who are at risk of getting hepatitis B. Risk factors include: having more than one sex partner in 6 months; being a homosexual male; having sexual contact with infected people; having cirrhosis or chronic hepatitis C; using intravenous (IV) drugs; being on dialysis or receiving blood transfusions; working in healthcare or popular safe and being exposed to infected blood or body fluids; being in the military or traveling to high-risk areas; and living with a face who has chronic hepatitis B infection.
Like any vaccine, the hepatitis B vaccine may not provide protection from malady in each person.
Hepatitis B vaccine will not protect against infection with hepatitis A, C, and E, or another viruses that affect the liver. It may also not protect against hepatitis B if you are already infected with the virus, even if you do not yet show symptoms.
You must not receive this vaccine if you have ever had a life-threatening allergic reaction to any vaccine containing hepatitis B, or if you are allergic to baker's yeast. You also must not receive this vaccine if you have received cancer chemotherapy or radiation treatment in the past 3 months.
If you have any of these another conditions, your vaccine may need to be postponed or not given at all:
· multiple sclerosis;
· kidney malady (or if you are on dialysis);
· a bleeding or blood clotting mess such as hemophilia or light bruising;
· a history of seizures;
· a neurologic mess or malady affecting the brain (or if this was a reaction to a previous vaccine);
· an allergy to latex rubber;
· a weak immune system caused by malady, bone marrow transplant, or by using determined medicines or receiving cancer treatments; or
· if you are taking a blood thinner such as warfarin (Coumadin).
You can still receive a vaccine if you have a minor cool. In the case of a more severe diseases with a fever or any type of infection, wait before you get better till receiving this vaccine.
FDA pregnancy category C. It is not known whether this vaccine will harm an unborn child. Speak your doctor if you are pregnant or plan to become pregnant while receiving the series of hepatitis B vaccines.
It is not known whether hepatitis B vaccine passes into breast milk or if it could harm a nursing child. Do not receive this vaccine without telling your doctor if you are breast-feeding a baby.
The vaccine is injected into a muscle. You will receive this injection in a doctor's office or another clinic setting.
The hepatitis B vaccine is given in a series of shots. The booster shots are sometimes given 1 month and 6 months after the first shot. If you have a tall risk of hepatitis B infection, you may be given an additional booster 2 months after the first shot.
Your individual booster schedule may be various from these guidelines. Follow your doctor's instructions or the schedule recommended by your local health department.
Your doctor may recommend treating fever and pain with an aspirin-free pain reliever such as acetaminophen (Tylenol) or ibuprofen (Motrin, Advil, and others) when the shot is given and for the following 24 hours. Follow the label directions or your doctor's instructions about how many of this medication to take.
It is especially significant to prevent fever from occurring if you have a seizure mess such as epilepsy.
Contact your doctor if you will miss a booster doze or if you get behind schedule. The following doze must be given as soon as possible. There is no need to start over.
Be certain to receive all recommended doses of this vaccine. You may not be fully protected if you do not receive the full series.
An overdose of this vaccine is unlikely to occur.
Follow your doctor's instructions about any restrictions on food, beverages, or activity.
You must not receive a booster vaccine if you had a life-threatening allergic reaction after the first shot.
Hold track of any and all side effects you have after receiving this vaccine. When you receive a booster doze, you will need to speak your doctor if the previous shot caused any side effects.
Becoming infected with hepatitis B is many more dangerous to your health than receiving this vaccine. However, like any medication, this vaccine can reason side effects but the risk of serious side effects is extremely low.
Get abnormal medical help if you have any of these signs of an allergic reaction: hives; difficulty breathing; swelling of your person, lips, tongue, or throat.
Call your doctor at once if you have a serious side effect such as:
· fever, sore throat, and headache with a severe blistering, peeling, and red skin rash;
· irritability;
· quick or pounding heartbeats; or
· light bruising or bleeding.
Smaller serious side effects include:
· redness, pain, swelling, or a lump where the shot was given;
· headache, dizziness;
· low fever;
· joint pain, body aches;
· weary feeling; or
· nausea, vomiting, stomach pain, constipation, diarrhea.
This is not a complete list of side effects and others may occur. Call your doctor for medical advice about side effects. You may message vaccine side effects to the US Department of Health and Human Services at 1-800-822-7967.
Till receiving this vaccine, speak the doctor about all another vaccines you have recently received.
Also speak the doctor if you have received drugs or treatments in the past 2 weeks that can weaken the immune system, including:
· an oral, nasal, inhaled, or injectable steroid medicine;
· medications to treat psoriasis, rheumatoid arthritis, or another autoimmune disorders, such as azathioprine (Imuran), efalizumab (Raptiva), etanercept (Enbrel), leflunomide (Arava), and others; or
· medicines to treat or prevent organ transplant rejection, such as basiliximab (Simulect), cyclosporine (Sandimmune, Neoral, Gengraf), muromonab-CD3 (Orthoclone), mycophenolate mofetil (CellCept), sirolimus (Rapamune), or tacrolimus (Prograf).
If you are using any of these medications, you may not be able to receive the vaccine, or may need to wait before the another treatments are finished.
There may be another drugs that can affect this vaccine. Speak your doctor about all medications you use. This includes prescription, over-the-counter, vitamin, and herbal commodity. Do not start a new medicine without telling your doctor.
Your doctor or pharmacist can provide more information about this vaccine. Additional information is accessible from your local health department or the Centers for Malady Control and Prevention.
Remember, hold this and all another medicines out of the reach of children, never share your medicines with others, and use this medicine only for the indication prescribed.
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